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October 04, 2011Behind the Curtain Fall 2011
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June 20, 2011Behind the Curtain Spring 2011
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September 01, 2010Behind the Curtain Fall 2010
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September 01, 2009Behind the Curtain Fall 2009
GCO's Founding Artistic Director Neal Goren will be one of the panelists on the Opera Quiz during this Saturday's broadcast of "Tosca" live from the Metropolitan Opera.. Find station and schedule information here: http://www.metoperafamily.org/metopera/broadcast/hd_events_template.aspx?id=16946
The Opera Company of Philadelphia, in collaboration with Gotham Chamber Opera and Music-Theatre Group in New York, has announced the launch of the second track for its Composer In Residence program, with applications being accepted from February 15 - March 7, 2012.
About the Composer In Residence Program
Funded over five years by a $1.4 million grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Composer In Residence (CIR) program provides a highly individualized professional development path for two of today's most promising opera composers. The goal of the CIR program is to foster tomorrow's American operatic masterpieces through personalized creative development and intensive, hands-on composition opportunities. The first CIR is Lembit Beecher, chosen during a competitive search in 2011. Read more...
Seeking New York's Next 'Other' Opera Company
by Zachary Woolfe
By now enough people have gotten on enough soapboxes about New York City Opera’s sorry financial state. But while the company remains in limbo, its precarious situation should be a reminder to look at the bigger picture.
Institutions come and go; what is important is the preservation of core values. So what do we want from opera in New York?
A variety of repertory, including a healthy diet of new works. Stimulating interpretations of the standards. Affordability. A range in the scale of performances, from grand to modest. Opportunities for young artists.
Aided by brilliant marketing, the Metropolitan Opera has in recent years pivoted to seem younger and fresher, concerned with theatricality and its connection to the broader cultural landscape. But with 3,800 seats it cannot provide intimacy, and its much-touted new productions of classic works have largely been old wine in new bottles. For reasons of size and temperament it doesn’t really do new opera. Read more...
Keeping Operas, And His Life, In Brisk Motion
By VIVIEN SCHWEITZER
“WHAT role does the government have in the home?” the American composer Nico Muhly asked recently over tea in a Midtown cafe. “It’s a complicated and interesting question.”
Mr. Muhly, 30, whose high-profile commissions include a work for the Metropolitan Opera, said that as a gay man he is particularly interested in the government’s role in personal relationships. He explores a longstanding fascination with polygamy in his chamber opera “Dark Sisters,” a story of a polygamist family in a Mormon offshoot whose children are removed by state officials concerned about child abuse. A co-production of Gotham Chamber Opera, Music-Theater Group and the Opera Company of Philadelphia, the work, with a libretto by Stephen Karam and sets and video projections by 59 Productions, will receive its premiere on Wednesday evening at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater of John Jay College. Read more...
Our Fall Newsletter features interviews and articles from the creative team, and a special messag from our Board President and our Executive Director. An excellent way to prepare for your experience with Dark Sisters.
Staging a contemporary opera: Nico Muhly, Rebecca Taichman, and Neal Goren discuss how the staging of Dark Sisters draws inspiration from the score.
Notes from our Artistic Director: Neal Goren explains the five-year gestation process of a new American opera.
Photos from the September Preview, and more.
Opening Night is Wednesday, Nov. 9 and performances run until Nov. 19.
Download your copy of the Newsletter here.
In a series of video "vodcasts", composer Nico Muhly discusses the landscape as inspiration for much of the music in "Dark Sisters". The video includes footage from Nico's own trip to Colorado City and gives insight on the composer at work. Stephen Karam discusses the story behind "Dark Sisters", and the 2008 raid at the Yearning for Zion Ranch in Eldorado, TX. Watch both videos in our "Learn More" section: http://www.gothamchamberopera.org/learn_more/podcast/dark_sisters
Gotham Chamber Opera has commissioned many noteworthy artists over the years to create unique works for our productions. Limited edition signed posters are available from Matthew Barney, John Currin, Elizabeth Peyton, Vera Lutter, and Lisa Yuskavage. NEW! Noah Scalin's original artwork for Dark Sisters is available in a 14" x 22" poster. A number of these, signed by Nico Muhly and Stephen Karam, are for sale at a special price. All signed posters are $150. Unsigned posters are $15. Visit our store to make your purchase today! Take me to the shop.
You can now subscribe to the podcast series for Dark Sisters through iTunes. The series includes conversations with composer Nico Muhly and plural marriage scholar Ken Verdoia, an interview with librettist Stephen Karam, and an upcoming roundtable discussion between Nico, conductor Neal Goren and director Rebecca Taichman. Download all the epsiodes to your iPod or iPhone. Click here to subscribe.
We begin our Tenth Anniversary season with Gotham's first ever world premiere, Dark Sisters, a new American opera by composer Nico Muhly and librettist Stephen Karam. Dark Sisters is a co-commission and co-production of Gotham Chamber Opera, Music-Theatre Group, and the Opera Company of Philadelphia, and the World Premiere will be November 9, 2011 at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater at John Jay College.
Our Anniversary Celebration continues in April 2012, when we will revive Gotham's very first production, Mozart's Il sogno di Scipione. The original creative team of director Christopher Alden, set designer Andrew Cavanaugh Holland, costume designer Fabio Toblini, and lighting designer Allen Hahn will be reunited for this production, which will open on April 11, 2012, also at The Gerald W. Lynch Theater.
Tickets for all performances (except the opening night galas) are available through Ticket Central.
We look forward to seeing you at Dark Sisters and Il sogno di Scipione.
Gotham Chamber Opera will celebrate its 10th anniversary by looking both to the future and to the past. Returning to a two-production schedule for the first time since 2008, the company will kick off the season with the world premiere of Dark Sisters, an opera by composer Nico Muhly and librettist Stephen Karam commissioned for the occasion. A co-commission and co-production of Gotham Chamber Opera, Music-Theatre Group, and the Opera Company of Philadelphia, Dark Sisters will premiere at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater at John Jay College in November 2011. Then, in April 2012, Gotham Chamber Opera will revive Mozart’s Il sogno di Scipione, which announced the company’s arrival on the New York cultural scene ten years ago. The original creative team of director Christopher Alden, set designer Andrew Cavanaugh Holland, costume designer Fabio Toblini, and lighting designer Allen Hahn will be reunited for the production, to be conducted by Gotham Chamber Opera's Founding Artistic Director Neal Goren, at The Gerald W. Lynch Theater, John Jay College.
The goal of Gotham's Arts in Education program is to enhance students’ understanding and enjoyment of opera and classical music through direct interaction with our productions. Teaching Artists visit the class twice before students attend a free preview performance, followed by a post-performances discussion with the artists, stage director and artistic director, and a follow up classroom visit. To learn more, visit our Education Page.